Comic Book & Graphic Novel Round-Up (9/12/12)

Comic Book & Graphic Novel Round-Up (9/12/12)

This week we look at Grant Morrison's new series Happy along with Demon Knights # 0, A Chinese Life and The Secret of Stone Frog.  read more

I'm Your Man: The Life of Leonard Cohen by Sylvie Simmons

<i>I'm Your Man: The Life of Leonard Cohen</i> by Sylvie Simmons

It’s not like we have no extant biographies of the remarkable and enigmatic poet, novelist, singer and songwriter Leonard Cohen. They abound. Neither is it the case that a biography has not been published recently. A quick Google search brings up several recent offerings, most notably Tim Footman’s Hallelujah: A New Biography (2009) and Anthony Reynolds’s Leonard Cohen: A Remarkable Life (2011). So … why another? Members of the Cohen club who have read these previous works know all about the songwriter’s home on the Greek island of Hydra, about Phil Spector, Joni Mitchell, Suzanne, Roshi, Mt. Baldy, Jikan, the...  read more

Privacy by Garret Keizer

<i>Privacy</i> by Garret Keizer

In March 2011, the Onion News Network aired a news parody skit in which a mock panel of experts lampooned Facebook as a “massive online surveillance program run by the CIA.” Though the skit deftly sends up intrusive elements within the government, as well as Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, it primarily targets the public’s willingness to volunteer personal information. The CIA, the panelists chirp, barely has to make an effort these days, seeing as we’re already telling them everything they want to know—an irony not likely to be lost on Privacy author Garret Keizer. Keizer comes to the titular subject...  read more

Comic Book & Graphic Novel Round-Up (9/5/12)

Comic Book & Graphic Novel Round-Up (9/5/12)

This week we look at three of DC's "zero" issues along with the first issue of John Arcudi's The Creep and Rex Mundi and Thief of Thieves.  read more

Daniel Fights A Hurricane by Shane Jones

<i>Daniel Fights A Hurricane</i> by Shane Jones

The epic hero has fallen to the wayside.   read more

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry by Rachel Joyce

<i>The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry</i> by Rachel Joyce

Do a Google News search for “faith,” then sit back and click through the first 10 stories. A warning, though—skip the mid-afternoon, Internet-browsing snack. You won’t want to eat for this.  read more

Comic Book & Graphic Novel Round-Up (8/29/12)

Comic Book & Graphic Novel Round-Up (8/29/12)

This week we review comics from Brecht Evens and Rick Geary along with Justice League #12 and The Goon #41.  read more

Adventures of a Waterboy by Mike Scott

<i>Adventures of a Waterboy</i> by Mike Scott

When Bob Dylan’s memoir, Chronicles, Vol. One, appeared in 2004, I approached the book with a mix of anticipation and trepidation—tantalized by the possibilities of Bob Dylan telling his own story, but resigned to the likelihood of suffering through 256 pages of Tarantula/“Outlined Epitaphs”-style inscrutable verbal noodling.  read more

Satan is Real: The Ballad of the Louvin Brothers by Charlie Louvin with Benjamin Whitmer

<i>Satan is Real: The Ballad of the Louvin Brothers</i> by Charlie Louvin with Benjamin Whitmer

Picking cotton the old fashioned way—by hand—was damned hard and unpleasant work. For the late Charlie Louvin, picking country music and making a living at it was hard as hell too.  read more

Comic Book & Graphic Novel Round-Up (8/22/12)

Comic Book & Graphic Novel Round-Up (8/22/12)

This week Paste reviews new graphic novels from Rutu Modan, Jeff Lemire and Bo Hampton and the first collection of Geoff Johns and Ivan Reis's Aquaman series.   read more

The Devil in Silver by Victor LaValle

<i>The Devil in Silver</i> by Victor LaValle

“There are really only two ways to react to the extraordinary. The first is to ponder the grand purpose until all the fun is sucked away, the second is to enjoy it.” - Victor LaValle, The Ecstatic Listen. At this exact moment, people are leaning forward in cheap folding chairs, clutching books in their laps and telling each other simple stories: what they used to be like, what happened, and what they are like now. Stories that move from needing help to accepting help to giving help in return. Stories of overcoming demons. Creation stories. Following that restorative model, Victor...  read more

Fear Of Music by Jonathan Lethem

<i>Fear Of Music</i> by Jonathan Lethem

Fear Of Music, the name of both the latest work from Jonathan Lethem and the Talking Heads album, comes as the most recent release from the 33 1/3 series. In this series, each book (30,000 to 40,000 words) investigates a single popular music album. The first, on Dusty Springfield’s album Dusty In Memphis, came out in 2003. Nine years later, more than 80 carry the 33 1/3 insignia, with more on the way. The existing set of books leans toward work from canonical ’60s and ’70s white rock musicians—Dylan’s Highway 61 Revisited; The Rolling Stones’ Exile On Main St.;...  read more

Comic Book & Graphic Novel Round-Up (8/15/12)

Comic Book & Graphic Novel Round-Up (8/15/12)

Each week, Paste reviews the most intriguing comic books, graphic novels, graphic memoirs and other illustrated books....  read more

Farther Away by Jonathan Franzen

<i>Farther Away</i> by Jonathan Franzen

To approach Jonathan Franzen in 2012 is, for the book reviewer (which almost invariably connotes an aspiring writer), a daunting task.  read more

Pure by Julianna Baggott

<i>Pure</i> by Julianna Baggott

Dystopian fever grips our world.  read more

Comic Book & Graphic Novel Round-Up (8/8/12)

Comic Book & Graphic Novel Round-Up (8/8/12)

Each week, Paste reviews the most intriguing comic books, graphic novels, graphic memoirs and other illustrated books....  read more

Beautiful Ruins by Jess Walter

<i>Beautiful Ruins</i> by Jess Walter

OK, class, time to discuss the classical difference between Horatian and Juvenalian satire. There will be a quiz. Ready? Horace, the Roman satirist, the father of gentility, emerged as a playful, witty, light-hearted kinda guy, a writer who enjoyed skewering mankind’s numberless follies. Most historians will tell you that Horace didn’t really believe in the idea of human evil—instead, he thought people happened to be a little silly, misguided, given to going off half-cocked. We struck him as delightfully funny, in a mild, gently comedic way. Horace liked to poke a little fun. On the other hand, the satirical Roman...  read more

American Ghost by Janis Owens

<i>American Ghost</i> by Janis Owens

In her 2009 memoir/cookbook, The Cracker Kitchen, Janis Owens describes the word “cracker” with its myriad of meanings. Less pejorative than descriptive, “cracker,” in her neck of the woods, distinguishes the local working class from the silk stocking set, or anyone else whose hands aren’t calloused and crusty from manhandling pulpwood. Owens should know the way of the Cracker, as she proudly claims the Northwest Florida culture as her own. And as she shows in her new novel, American Ghost, assuming Cracker-ism is a one-dimensional appellation would be a mistake. American Ghost haunts Owens’ own history. The story takes...  read more

Comic Book & Graphic Novel Round-Up (8/1/12)

Comic Book & Graphic Novel Round-Up (8/1/12)

Each week, Paste reviews the most intriguing comic books, graphic novels, graphic memoirs and other illustrated books....  read more

Comic Book & Graphic Novel Round-Up (7/25/12)

Comic Book & Graphic Novel Round-Up (7/25/12)

Each week, Paste reviews the most intriguing comic books, graphic novels, graphic memoirs and other illustrated books....  read more

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